Seahawks Super Bowl Ring: Inside the largest ring for Super Bowl LX

The Seahawks received their Seahawks Super Bowl Ring in a private ceremony four months after the downtown Seattle parade, revealing a team-crafted, 50th-season design.

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Kevin Mitchell
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Data-driven sports analyst covering advanced metrics in baseball and basketball. Former college athlete and ESPN digital contributor.
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Seahawks Super Bowl Ring: Inside the largest ring for Super Bowl LX

Players and coaches of the Super Bowl champion received their Seahawks Super Bowl Ring in a private presentation held four months after the team's February parade through downtown Seattle.

The ring, produced by , marks the franchise's Super Bowl LX title over the Patriots and the club's 50th season. Team officials described the piece as the largest Super Bowl championship ring ever made. Its top shows the Seahawks logo flanked by two Lombardi Trophies to signify the franchise's two Super Bowl wins and is ringed by 50 diamonds to honor the milestone season.

The design is dense with team- and fan-specific elements. A 12 Flag button activates arches that pop out to reveal the words WORLD CHAMPIONS. One side of the band bears each player's last name, number and the team mantra MOB; the opposite side reads 12 AS ONE above a Seattle skyline. The ring can be detached from its base and worn as a pendant. Inside the band sits an authentic piece of a football from the season with the number 50, and 17 WINS is engraved to represent the team's total for the year, including the postseason. The bottom of the ring features 12 feathers to honor the 12s.

Jason of Beverly Hills’ founder , who started the company in 2002 and has produced 26 different championship rings including the 2009 Los Angeles Lakers’ rings, said the project was collaborative. He described working with franchise leadership and the team's creative staff and said he met with players — including and Jaxon Smith‑Njigba — to learn what mattered to them as the design was developed.

Team president framed the ring as a physical record of the season. He said the piece represents the franchise's historic 50th season, honors the commitment across the organization and reflected the stories and fan support that defined the run. Arnold also thanked Jason of Beverly Hills for translating the team's vision into the finished work.

The presentation closed a private chapter in the Seahawks' championship celebrations: the team had invited hundreds of thousands into downtown Seattle for a parade in February, and the ring ceremony took place months later away from the public spectacle. Officials have not announced any follow‑up public unveilings tied to the rings.

That the Seahawks are calling the ring the largest Super Bowl championship ring ever made introduces a friction point in the story: the claim stands without a side‑by‑side comparison of dimensions or cost to other rings. The team and maker described the construction and features in detail, but the available account does not quantify how "largest" was measured, nor does it place the piece against previous championship rings in a measurable way.

Another evident gap is logistical: the club has not disclosed how many rings were produced or which recipients beyond players and coaches received them. The design notes and the private presentation answer what the rings look like and who helped design them; they do not say how many exist or whether replicas or public versions will be offered.

The single consequential unanswered question now is a practical one — how many rings did the franchise create, and will any be shown publicly beyond the private presentation? The Seahawks and Jason of Beverly Hills crafted a ring that ties directly to the 2025 season, Lumen Field and the 12s, but the next public step for the physical symbol of the championship remains unannounced.

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Data-driven sports analyst covering advanced metrics in baseball and basketball. Former college athlete and ESPN digital contributor.